Pendola Fire | |
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![]() The extent of the Pendola Fire | |
Date(s) |
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Location | Yuba County, Northern California, United States |
Coordinates | 39°28′23″N121°05′06″W / 39.473°N 121.085°W |
Statistics | |
Burned area | 11,725 acres (4,745 ha; 18 sq mi; 47 km2) |
Impacts | |
Structures destroyed | 72 destroyed, 3 damaged |
Damage | $4.2 million (equivalent to about $7.2 million in 2023) in firefighting costs |
Ignition | |
Cause | Tree falling into power line |
Map | |
The Pendola Fire was a large wildfire in Northern California's Yuba County in October 1999. The fire burned for one week, spreading to 11,725 acres (4,745 hectares) and destroying dozens of buildings. The fire was caused by a tree falling on a power line operated by Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), who ultimately settled with the United States Forest Service and other parties for more than $17.3 million.
California's 1999 wildfire season was one of the worst on record in its time in terms of acres burned and structures destroyed. [1] Almost 750,000 acres (300,000 ha) burned statewide between the beginning of the year and the official declaration of fire season's closure in Northern California on November 9. Approximately 500,000 acres (200,000 ha) of the burned acreage was National Forest land, and the remaining area—not quite 274,000 acres (111,000 ha)—was private property or other lands under state firefighting jurisdiction. [2]
By October 18, during the Pendola Fire, approximately 660,000 acres (270,000 ha) had burned throughout California. [3] The Pendola Fire burned simultaneously with several other large wildfires in Northern California, including the Big Bar Complex fires in Trinity County and the Jones Fire in Shasta County. [4]
A red flag warning was issued for the area of the Pendola Fire for the weekend of its ignition on account of high winds. [5] At 4:00 a.m. on Saturday, October 16, 1999, the fire lookout at Oregon Peak reported a wind gust of 50 miles per hour (80 km/h). [5]
The Pendola Fire began at about 4:30 a.m. on Saturday, October 16, north of New Bullards Bar Reservoir in Yuba County. [6] [7] The fire ignited when high winds blew a 170-foot (52 m) ponderosa pine down into a PG&E 12-kilovolt power distribution line on a tract of privately owned land in the community of Camptonville. [6] [8] The fire was originally located near Baker Road and Pendola Extension, for which it was named. [7]
The fire quickly burned southwest, and spotted across New Bullards Bar Reservoir at a narrow section south of Madrone Cove. [5] There it continued to burn in forested areas north of Dobbins, spreading to ~2,500 acres (1,000 ha) by nighttime. On Sunday, October 17, the fire burned an additional ~3,000 acres (1,200 ha). [9]
By the morning of Monday, October 18, the fire had burned 5,120 acres (2,070 ha) and was 10 percent contained. [10] At 3:00 p.m., residents of Dobbins, Brownsville, and Challenge were able to return home. [7] The fire continued to grow, more than doubling in acreage, [9] and by 8:00 p.m. that night, the fire had burned about 11,000 acres (4,500 ha) and was 65 percent contained. [7]
More than 2,500 firefighters were mobilized to suppress the fire, [6] which was declared controlled by the U.S. Forest Service on Saturday, October 23. [11] [12]
The fire ultimately burned 11,725 acres (4,745 ha), 3,866 acres (1,565 ha) of which were National Forest lands. [6] The effects of the fire on Tahoe National Forest land east of Bullards Bar Reservoir were mild, akin to the effects of a prescribed fire. [11] The cost of the firefighting effort came to $4.2 million (equivalent to about $7.2 million in 2023). [6] The area burned in the Pendola Fire overlapped with the area burned by the destructive 5,743-acre (2,324 ha) Williams Fire in September 1997. [7]
The Pendola Fire destroyed 72 buildings, comprising 13 homes, two commercial buildings, and 57 other structures. Forty-four vehicles were also destroyed, per Forest Service statistics reported by The Union. [12] One additional home and two other structures were damaged. [13] A member of Nevada County's Fire Safe Council said that all of the burned homes had no brush clearance. [14]
On October 18 the Northern Sierra Air Quality Management District issued an advisory warning at-risk people to stay indoors because of the impacts to air quality from the Pendola Fire's smoke. [15]
In December 1999 the Tahoe National Forest proposed salvage logging operations in the approximately 2,600-acre (1,100 ha) portion of the forest that had burned in the Pendola Fire. [16] Timber companies eventually extracted 18.5 million board-feet of timber from the area, paying over $2 million (equivalent to about $3.2 million in 2023) for the right to do so. Approximately $235,000 of the taxed money went towards reforestation. [17]
After the fire, the Forest Service alleged that PG&E or its contractors should have inspected the power line and removed the ponderosa pine that fell and caused the Pendola Fire before it did so. [6]
PG&E was sued by multiple parties in Yuba County Superior Court for their role in the Pendola Fire. Property owners filed lawsuits in October 2001 and October 2002, and timber company CHY Co. filed a suit for $4.6 million in damages in October 2002 after 2,000 acres (810 ha) of their land burned in the fire. [13] [18] PG&E settled with one of the groups of property owners for $800,000, and settled with CHY Co. in 2005 for $1.8 million (equivalent to about $2.7 million in 2023). [18]
In 2009, PG&E settled with the Forest Service for $14.75 million (equivalent to about $20.4 million in 2023), including more than $10 million in "compensation for natural resources damage". [19] There was no litigation; the settlement was reached through mediation. [6] The settlement with PG&E was the second-largest ever for a wildfire case in the United States, after the federal government obtained a settlement with Union Pacific Railroad Company in 2008 for $102 million (equivalent to about $141.8 million in 2023) over the Storrie Fire in 2000. [20]
The Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) is an American investor-owned utility (IOU). The company is headquartered at Kaiser Center, in Oakland, California. PG&E provides natural gas and electricity to 5.2 million households in the northern two-thirds of California, from Bakersfield and northern Santa Barbara County, almost to the Oregon and Nevada state lines.
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The 2018 Camp Fire in Northern California's Butte County was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California's history. The fire began on the morning of Thursday, November 8, 2018, when part of a poorly maintained Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) transmission line in the Feather River Canyon failed during strong katabatic winds. Those winds rapidly drove the Camp Fire through the communities of Concow, Magalia, Butte Creek Canyon, and Paradise, largely destroying them. The fire burned for another two weeks, and was contained on Sunday, November 25, after burning 153,336 acres (62,050 ha). The Camp Fire caused 85 fatalities, displaced more than 50,000 people, and destroyed more than 18,000 structures, causing an estimated US$16.5 billion in damage. It was the most expensive natural disaster by insured losses of 2018, and is a notable case of a utility-caused wildfire.
The Zogg Fire was a wildfire that burned 56,338 acres (22,799 ha) in southwestern Shasta County and northwestern Tehama County, which are both in California, in the United States, as part of the severe 2020 California wildfire season. The fire was first reported on September 27, 2020 and was not fully contained until October 13, 2020, by which time it had destroyed much of the communities of Igo and Ono, killing four people and destroying 204 buildings.
The 2021 Dixie Fire was an enormous wildfire in Butte, Plumas, Lassen, Shasta, and Tehama counties in Northern California. Named after a nearby Dixie Road, the fire began in the Feather River Canyon near Cresta Dam in Butte County on July 13, 2021, and burned 963,309 acres (389,837 ha) before it was declared 100 percent contained on October 25, 2021. It was the largest single source wildfire in recorded California history, and the second-largest wildfire overall, The fire damaged or destroyed several communities, including Greenville on August 4, Canyondam on August 5, and Warner Valley on August 12.
The River Fire was a destructive 2021 wildfire that burned 2,619 acres (1,060 ha) near Colfax in Nevada County and Placer County, California. The fire broke out on August 4, 2021, and burned 2,619 acres (1,060 ha) before it was fully contained on August 13, 2021. The River Fire destroyed 142 structures, damaged 21 more, and resulted in four injuries to firefighters and civilians. It was the fifth most destructive fire of California's 2021 wildfire season. The exact cause of the fire is unknown, but it was determined to have been of human origin by investigators who traced the ignition to a campground by the Bear River west of Colfax.
The Mosquito Fire was California's largest wildfire in 2022. The fire began on September 6, burned 76,788 acres in Placer and El Dorado counties in September and October, and was pronounced fully contained on October 22. It affected the Tahoe and Eldorado National Forests and destroyed 78 structures in the rural communities of Michigan Bluff, Foresthill, and Volcanoville. The fire suppression effort cost more than $180 million, and at its peak involved more than 3,700 firefighters. The precise cause of the fire is not known, but the possible role of Pacific Gas & Electric Company (PG&E) equipment is the subject of multiple civil lawsuits and a Forest Service investigation. The Mosquito Fire was one of 7,477 wildfires in California in 2022, which burned a combined 331,358 acres (134,096 ha).
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The Kinneloa Fire was a destructive wildfire in Los Angeles County, Southern California in October 1993. The fire destroyed 196 buildings in the communities of Altadena, Kinneloa Mesa, and Sierra Madre in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, becoming at the time the twelfth-most destructive wildfire in California's history and one of the most destructive wildfires in Los Angeles County history. The fire caused a multitude of minor injuries, one direct fatality, and two indirect fatalities.
The 1999 Jones Fire was a destructive wildfire in the U.S. state of California's Shasta County. The fire ignited on October 16, and was contained on October 19, 1999. It burned 26,200 acres (10,600 ha), destroyed 954 structures, and resulted in one fatality, becoming the then-second most destructive wildfire ever recorded in California, behind only the Oakland firestorm of 1991. As of 2023 it remains one of the 20 most destructive wildfires in the history of the state. The cause of the fire was never determined.
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The Copper Fire was a wildfire in Los Angeles County, Southern California, in June 2002. After igniting on June 5 near the city of Santa Clarita, the fire burned for a week and consumed 23,407 acres, damaging wildlife habitat and historic structures in the Angeles National Forest. It was fully contained on June 12. The fire destroyed more than two dozen buildings and resulted in at least nine firefighter injuries. The federal government later sued two contractors, arguing that their negligence had sparked the fire during construction work. The suit resulted in a jury award in the government's favor of more than $36 million. The award was the first ever in the United States for environmental damages from a wildfire.
The Harlow Fire was a large wildfire in Central California's Mariposa and Madera counties in mid-July 1961. The fire ignited on July 10 and burned rapidly, spreading to 43,329 acres before it was fully surrounded by containment lines on July 13 and fully controlled on July 15. During those six days the Harlow Fire destroyed more than one hundred buildings, devastating the rural communities of Ahwahnee and Nipinnawasee in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada to the west of Yosemite National Park and the Sierra National Forest. The latter town never recovered. Two residents of Ahwahnee died fleeing the fire in their car and twenty-two injuries occurred among civilians and firefighters. A law enforcement investigation determined the fire was intentionally set by a local teenager who claimed to be trying to clear away brush; he was charged with arson but found innocent by a jury.
The Wolf Fire was a large wildfire in Southern California's Ventura County, north of the city of Ojai, in June 2002. The fire, ignited by target shooting in dry grass, began on June 1 and burned 21,645 acres before it was completely contained on June 14. Containing the fire cost $15 million. No deaths or serious injuries occurred, but the fire impacted parts of the Sespe Wilderness and the Los Padres National Forest, closing roads and campgrounds while threatening Native American cultural sites and wildlife habitat. The Wolf Fire was the sixth largest fire of the 2002 California wildfire season, during which 8,171 wildfires burned more than half a million acres (200,000 ha).
The Curve Fire was a destructive wildfire in the Angeles National Forest in Los Angeles County, California, in September of 2002. The fire, which ignited on September 1 from candles associated with a Santería ritual, grew to 20,857 acres before it was declared fully contained on September 5. The Curve Fire destroyed 73 structures, forced the temporary closure of several highways over the Labor Day weekend, and caused multiple injuries.
The Buckweed Fire was a large wildfire in Los Angeles County, Southern California, in late October of 2007. The fire was unintentionally ignited on October 21 by a ten-year-old boy playing with matches, and Santa Ana winds drove the fire as it burned 38,356 acres over the course of six days until firefighters completely contained it on October 26. Dozens of buildings were destroyed.
The Power Fire was a large wildfire in Northern California's Amador County in October of 2004. The fire began on October 6 and burned approximately 17,000 acres, largely in the Eldorado National Forest, before it was contained on October 21. The fire was begun by workers trimming vegetation around Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) power lines, and the federal government sued both PG&E and the company contracted to do the trimming. The latter party ended up paying the federal government $45 million.